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Carney's expected green light for oil pipeline causes unease in caucus and cabinet: sources

Carney's expected green light for oil pipeline causes unease in caucus and cabinet: sources

Concerns raised internally that ex-environment minister Steven Guilbeault could resign. With Prime Minister Mark Carney expected to lay out a path forward for an oil pipeline to northwest B.C. on Thursday, senior people around him have had to assuage skittish MPs and at least one cabinet minister about the virtues of the forthcoming "grand bargain" with Alberta. One dynamic at...

Carney pins hopes on domestic market with new steel, lumber tariff supports

Carney pins hopes on domestic market with new steel, lumber tariff supports

OTTAWA -- Prime Minister Mark Carney wants the Canadian lumber and steel sectors to look for more opportunities at home as U.S. tariffs and shifting global trade tides limit their opportunities abroad.

Carney says he expects to see Trump at World Cup event next week in Washington

Carney says he expects to see Trump at World Cup event next week in Washington

Prime Minister Mark Carney expects to speak with the U.S. president at a World Cup event in Washington next week, but he's cautioning Canadians not to read too much into the conversations between the two leaders. Carney said Wednesday that trade negotiations with the United States have not restarted. He also said that he spoke with Donald Trump on Tuesday...

Carney announces new support for steel and lumber industries, but nothing for aluminum

Carney announces new support for steel and lumber industries, but nothing for aluminum

Amid the ongoing trade war with the United States, Prime Minister Mark Carney has announced a slate of new measures to help and protect the steel and lumber industries. Among the new measures is further limiting foreign steel imports from countries without a free trade agreement with Canada — from 50 to 20 per cent of 2024 levels — a...

Industry minister denies rumours she’s eying French ambassador role

Industry minister denies rumours she’s eying French ambassador role

Canada’s industry minister is denying rumours she is considering leaving politics to become Canada’s ambassador to France. Speaking from Tokyo, Melanie Joly told reporters Tuesday that she is not interested in the position. “Absolutely not,” Joly said when asked about her interest in the role. “I’m focused on my job right now, which is to be the minister of industry...

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Liberal advantage increases in post budget period. Liberals 42, Conservatives 37, NDP 9. Carney ahead of Poilievre by 27 points on preferred PM tracking

Liberal advantage increases in post budget period. Liberals 42, Conservatives 37, NDP 9. Carney ahead of Poilievre by 27 points on preferred PM tracking

The Weekly Nanos Tracking is produced by the Nanos Research Corporation, headquartered in Canada, which operates in Canada and the United States. The data is based on random interviews with 1,000 Canadian consumers (recruited by RDD land- and cell-line sample), using a four-week rolling average of 250 respondents each week, 18 years of age and over. The random sample of...

Consumer confidence continues to sputter in neutral.

Consumer confidence continues to sputter in neutral.

Nanos conducted an RDD dual frame (land- and cell-lines) telephone random survey of 1,053 respondents in Canada. This report is based on the four waves of tracking ending November 21st, 2025. The margin of error for a random survey of 1,053 Canadians is ±3.0 percentage points, 19 times out of 20. The research was commissioned by the Bloomberg and was conducted by Nanos Research.



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A pipeline deal won't be enough to tame Alberta's separatists

A pipeline deal won't be enough to tame Alberta's separatists

Premier Danielle Smith walks a tightrope ahead of UCP AGM. Ahead of this weekend’s United Conservative Party (UCP) AGM, Prime Minister Mark Carney is expected to sit down with Premier Danielle Smith to delineate a roadmap to pipelines, energy regulatory reform and carbon capture projects. One would expect genuine progress in these negotiations to take the wind out of separatists’...

Poilievre slams Smith-Carney pipeline deal as a 'public relations stunt'

Poilievre slams Smith-Carney pipeline deal as a 'public relations stunt'

'We believe the government of British Columbia has to agree,' says Prime Minister Mark Carney, of a new pipeline to the northwest B.C. coast. Pierre Poilievre was ready. The Conservative leader was ready to rumble. Article content On Thursday, Prime Minister Mark Carney will be in Calgary. As reported in this column this past Saturday morning, Carney and Premier Danielle...

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No way 'to do business,' B.C. Energy Minister Dix says of Alberta's pipeline plans

No way 'to do business,' B.C. Energy Minister Dix says of Alberta's pipeline plans

VICTORIA -- British Columbia's energy minister says political talk of a pipeline from Alberta to the Pacific isn't the way to do business and leaks through the media should not be considered the government's way of engaging with First Nations over such a project.

Alberta-Ottawa pipeline accord unlikely to be "champagne-popping moment:' Enserva CEO

Alberta-Ottawa pipeline accord unlikely to be "champagne-popping moment:' Enserva CEO

CALGARY -- Oil and gas industry advocates say they're heartened by an expected agreement between Alberta and Ottawa on a new West Coast pipeline, but their optimism is tempered by the long list of obstacles that would remain.

Politician's Pen

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The ‘Balance of Responsibility’ and Why I Voted for the Carney Budget

Let’s face it, with 343 MPs in this Parliament and one Green Party seat, I had not imagined that any vote might be so tight that my single “yay” or “nay” could hold sway. Then, based on a combination of minority math and political machination, the knife-edge vote on Mark Carney’s first budget on November 17th came along and the...

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In-house relief: new Conservative campaign manager a positive signal

In-house relief: new Conservative campaign manager a positive signal

Pierre Poilievre and the Conservatives have earned themselves some positive public relations with the announcement that Steve Outhouse will serve as the next federal election campaign manager for the party. After a few difficult weeks of news for the party, the Outhouse appointment is being heralded as a good thing.

Even before it’s made public, the Ottawa-Alberta deal is taking heat from all sides

Even before it’s made public, the Ottawa-Alberta deal is taking heat from all sides

Green Party Leader Elizabeth May is pretty sure that backbench Liberal MPs from British Columbia are really worried. Why? “They’ll lose their seats,” she told reporters. “And they like their seats.” The Ottawa-Alberta memorandum of understanding that has not yet been released − to be signed Thursday by Prime Minister Mark Carney and Alberta Premier Danielle Smith − is that...

Carney’s ‘commerce-first’ foreign policy spares no care for atrocities

Carney’s ‘commerce-first’ foreign policy spares no care for atrocities

The Carney government cannot follow its conscience on Sudan because that would take it in a different direction from its trade policy

Canadians are protecting the mirage of single-tier health care. It doesn’t exist

Canadians are protecting the mirage of single-tier health care. It doesn’t exist

Canadian health care as an idea, and Canadian health care as an institution, exist in two different universes. Notionally, health care in Canada is single-payer, universal and egalitarian. No one can jump the line. No one can buy better or faster care. Everyone has reasonably timely access to primary and specialist care, and critical issues are treated as true medical...

Thanks, No Thanks, JD: Sorry, Not Sorry From North of the Border
Did Carney really ditch Canada's feminist foreign policy?

Did Carney really ditch Canada's feminist foreign policy?

Is the Liberal party’s foreign policy no longer feminist? People have been asking the question all week, ever since Prime Minister Mark Carney said on Sunday that, “We have that aspect to our foreign policy, but I wouldn’t describe our foreign policy as feminist foreign policy. Those are different points, but related.” He subsequently clarified that gender equality remains a...



This Year in Halifax: The Takeaways from HFX 2025

This Year in Halifax: The Takeaways from HFX 2025

At the Halifax International Security Forum this past weekend, 300 participants from the world’s democracies – ministers and legislators, military and diplomats, business and civil society, scholars and journalists — gathered for a 16th year to discuss how those democracies are faring. Not so well, based on my corridor conversations, an impression reinforced by the annual IPSOS survey. A strong...

When the U.S. finally comes to its senses, Canada should think twice before crawling back

When the U.S. finally comes to its senses, Canada should think twice before crawling back

When all this is over — when the United States elects a president who doesn’t dump on Canada, when the U.S. ambassador is not a thug, when Canadians at the border no longer fear being treated like convicts, when Washington doesn’t demean our sovereignty, when tariffs aren’t capricious punishments meted out at 3 a.m. to redress imagined grievances — we...

Why Canada can’t back Trump’s peace plan for Ukraine

Why Canada can’t back Trump’s peace plan for Ukraine

Point number four of President Donald Trump’s plan to bring peace to Ukraine screams the quiet part about the new world order at top volume: “a dialogue will be held between Russia and NATO, mediated by the United States, to resolve all security issues.”

Is Pierre Poilievre sending a message about changing his tone?

Is Pierre Poilievre sending a message about changing his tone?

It’s maybe too soon to declare the “frat house” days over, but Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre has appointed himself a campaign chief who likely wouldn’t be looking for an invitation to take part in many frat-party hijinks. The news came out over the weekend in the Toronto Sun. Jenni Byrne, a polarizing figure among Conservatives, is out as campaign manager...

Approving a pipeline project is easy. Making it happen will be difficult and painful

Approving a pipeline project is easy. Making it happen will be difficult and painful

Imagine this scenario: B.C. wants to build a pipeline that needs to cross Alberta to reach its destination. Despite Alberta’s strenuous objections, B.C. negotiates a deal with the federal government to forge ahead with the plan.

American leadership looks chaotic. The truth may be more sinister

American leadership looks chaotic. The truth may be more sinister

I’m calling it the Halifax screwjob. Over 48 hours this weekend, the Trump administration sold out its most deserving ally, sided with an enemy, reversed itself, and reversed itself again. The saga is further evidence for an untrustworthy America, where bad actors are winning the power struggle.



Could Trading Tariff Relief for F-35s be an Offer Trump Can’t Refuse?

Could Trading Tariff Relief for F-35s be an Offer Trump Can’t Refuse?

While Prime Minister Mark Carney’s response of “Who cares?” when asked Monday about the last time he spoke with Donald Trump could have been either genuine or tactical indifference, there’s no question that Trump really does care. Canada’s review of the contract to buy 88 F-35 fighter jets from the mammoth American defence contractor Lockheed-Martin is clearly annoying Trump. We...

Ottawa’s coastal double-cross risks more than one pipeline fight

Ottawa’s coastal double-cross risks more than one pipeline fight

In Ottawa, on the desk of one of the prime minister’s many strategists, it wouldn’t be surprising to find a document titled: Operation Butter Up B.C. The plan would go something like this: Repeatedly visit British Columbia over a series of weeks to dispense federal cash on feel-good announcements like upgrading the iconic White Rock Pier or building the Filipino...

With Carney in power, the Liberals seek to turn the purple vote

With Carney in power, the Liberals seek to turn the purple vote

At a steakhouse on Avenue Road in Toronto earlier this month, a number of conservatives turned up for a Liberal MP’s fundraiser. One was John Tory, the former Toronto mayor and onetime leader of Ontario Progressive Conservatives. It was perhaps not surprising that Mr. Tory was at this fundraiser, given that the Liberal MP in the Eglinton-Lawrence riding, Vince Gasparro...

Just Watch Me

Just Watch Me

On St. Jean Baptiste Day in 1970, my father took my brother Rick and me to Montreal from where we lived in Valleyfield, to watch the annual parade celebrating Quebec’s national pride.

What Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre can learn from Liberal MP Nate Erskine-Smith

What Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre can learn from Liberal MP Nate Erskine-Smith

Watching former Conservative leader Andrew Scheer and long-time Conservative MP Scott Reid run from the back of the room to their seats in the House of Commons Monday, claiming their voting app didn’t work, recalled Nova Scotia floor-crossing MP Chris d’Entremont’s depiction of Pierre Poilievre’s party as a “frat house.” The way Poilievre ran the party, d’Entremont told the CBC...

While an erratic Trump ignores Canada, Carney quietly cements international investments. Elbows up, indeed

While an erratic Trump ignores Canada, Carney quietly cements international investments. Elbows up, indeed

So, what happened to the “elbows up” defiance of the U.S. that Mark Carney promised? It’s been about 10 months since U.S. President Donald Trump declared economic war on Canada, and there has been no progress in ending the debacle.



Why the U.S. ambassador is wrong about his criticism of the Ronald Reagan tariff ads

Why the U.S. ambassador is wrong about his criticism of the Ronald Reagan tariff ads

“You do not come into America and start government-funded political ads and expect that there (won’t) be consequences or reaction.” On this, U.S. Ambassador to Canada Pete Hoekstra is right.

CAQ's constitution is blood-chilling for all Quebecers

CAQ's constitution is blood-chilling for all Quebecers

For a bill touted as the “law of laws,” the Legault government’s proposed constitution for Quebec has so far resulted in the spilling of surprisingly little ink. Article content That might be about to change.

Québec’s Pre-Election Year Drama: Founder’s Syndrome, Firings, and a PQ that Could Win by Default

Québec’s Pre-Election Year Drama: Founder’s Syndrome, Firings, and a PQ that Could Win by Default

With Premier François Legault experiencing the throes of seemingly irrevocable voter fatigue less than a year before the scheduled October 5, 2026 Quebec election, the Parti Québecois (PQ) is benefiting from not only disenchantment with Legault’s Coalition Avenir Québec (CAQ), but also from problems plaguing its other rivals. While the PQ’s lead in the polls has declined in recent weeks...

Gripen E vs F-35? The Wrong Question to Ask

Gripen E vs F-35? The Wrong Question to Ask

There’s been a lot of debate about which fighter jet is “best,” the F-35 or the Gripen E, after Saab offered Canada the option to buy Gripens instead of more F-35s. Many want to turn it into an all-or-nothing issue, and the least serious commentators pit them against each other instead of discussing how dangerous they would be to the...

Staying in the Game: Why Canada’s Global Health Leadership Matters Now More Than Ever
Here’s why Doug Ford is in no hurry to fire his hapless labour minister

Here’s why Doug Ford is in no hurry to fire his hapless labour minister

Doug Ford faces a growing political problem with a seemingly obvious solution. That problem is David Piccini, Ontario’s embattled minister of labour.

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Carney meets with new Newfoundland and Labrador premier on 'ambitious agenda'

Carney meets with new Newfoundland and Labrador premier on 'ambitious agenda'

Newfoundland and Labrador's new premier is meeting with Prime Minister Mark Carney. Carney welcomed Tony Wakeham to Ottawa today and said the premier's agenda is ambitious. Wakeham and his Progressive Conservatives won a slim majority in the province's election last month, ending a decade in power for the Liberals. Wakeham told reporters Tuesday he wants the federal government to spend...

B.C. Coastal First Nations vow oil pipeline to north coast 'will never happen'

B.C. Coastal First Nations vow oil pipeline to north coast 'will never happen'

The president of the Coastal First Nations in British Columbia said Wednesday an oil pipeline to the province's north coast "will never happen" and slammed Ottawa for negotiating with Alberta on a possible pipeline deal without involving First Nations. Prime Minister Mark Carney is expected to unveil details of a memorandum of understanding with the Alberta government on a pipeline...

Quebec bleeds doctors, as Alberta invents new methods of overreach

Quebec bleeds doctors, as Alberta invents new methods of overreach

A recent survey from Abacus Data and the CMA offers a sober snapshot of how physicians are feeling about recent political changes. Almost half of physicians nationwide (43%) say they do not feel trusted or respected by their provincial government. In Alberta and Quebec — the two provinces now reshaping the rules of medical practice — that number spikes to...

Ottawa reaches agreements with Ontario, Manitoba to streamline reviews for major projects

Ottawa reaches agreements with Ontario, Manitoba to streamline reviews for major projects

Ontario and Manitoba struck draft agreements with the federal government this week to streamline reviews for major projects, as part of a larger push by Prime Minister Mark Carney to fast-track resource development and infrastructure building in the face of U.S. trade uncertainty. The co-operation agreements will allow the provinces to take the lead role in environmental assessment and Indigenous...

Some B.C. Liberal MPs concerned about prospect of a new oil pipeline: sources

Some B.C. Liberal MPs concerned about prospect of a new oil pipeline: sources

Deal expected Thursday on conditions for pipeline to northwest B.C. With Prime Minister Mark Carney poised to sign a "grand bargain" with Alberta later this week, some B.C. Liberal MPs are raising concerns about Ottawa possibly giving the green light to a new oil pipeline to the Pacific, sources say. Liberal MPs told CBC News that they have not been...

F-35 beat Gripen fighter jet 'by a mile' in 2021 Defence Department competition

F-35 beat Gripen fighter jet 'by a mile' in 2021 Defence Department competition

Data obtained by Radio-Canada shows Lockheed Martin jet was clear winner. The American-built F-35 fighter jet dominated its Swedish rival Gripen in terms of technical and military capabilities during a competition held by the Defence Department in 2021. The competition focused on each fighter jet's capabilities in defending the North American continent and the likelihood of success in various missions...

Gripen fighter jet purchase would allow Canada to assert sovereignty, says past chair of House Defence Committee McKay

Gripen fighter jet purchase would allow Canada to assert sovereignty, says past chair of House Defence Committee McKay

A former chair of the House Defence Committee says the federal government should reverse course and buy Sweden’s Gripen warplane over the American F-35. There has been a full-court press trumpeting Saab’s fighter jet, which included a visit to Canada’s capital by the Swedish royal family. Canada’s selection of Lockheed Martin’s F-35 for its next fighter jet fleet is currently...

Canada should buy F-35s but plan for European fighter jets next, former general says

Canada should buy F-35s but plan for European fighter jets next, former general says

A former air force commander says Ottawa should buy its full order of 88 U.S.-made F-35s to fill an imminent gap in fighter capacity but switch to European warplanes for future purchases to provide more independence from the United States. Retired lieutenant-general Yvan Blondin, who was commander of the Royal Canadian Air Force from 2012 until 2015, said the possibility...

Energy minister to brief B.C. Liberal MPs on expected Alberta pipeline deal

Energy minister to brief B.C. Liberal MPs on expected Alberta pipeline deal

Energy and Natural Resources Minister Tim Hodgson is set to brief B.C. Liberal MPs today on the government's expected energy deal with the province of Alberta. The move comes after B.C. Liberal MPs last week said any deal involving a pipeline to the West Coast would need consent from First Nations and the B.C. government, repeating talking points from the...

Oil tanker ban just one obstacle to northern B.C. pipeline, experts say

Oil tanker ban just one obstacle to northern B.C. pipeline, experts say

A new oilsands pipeline to the northern B.C. coast is a non-starter as long as oil tankers are forbidden there, but experts say a removal of the federal ban would only lift one of many obstacles deterring the private sector from such a project. Media reports say the federal and Alberta governments are poised to announce a memorandum of understanding...

Liberals to announce loans for lumber producers, new quotas on some foreign steel

Liberals to announce loans for lumber producers, new quotas on some foreign steel

Prime Minister Mark Carney will announce additional help for the ailing lumber and steel industries Wednesday afternoon, including additional money for softwood lumber producers and further restrictions on some foreign steel imports, as companies deal with the fallout from the trade war with the U.S.

Carney to announce measures to protect steel, softwood lumber industries: sources

Carney to announce measures to protect steel, softwood lumber industries: sources

Help is on the way for Canadian steel producers and those in softwood lumber affected by the ongoing trade dispute with the United States. Multiple senior government sources confirmed to CTV News that Prime Minister Mark Carney will announce measures on Wednesday to protect the steel industry, which has been hit with 50 per cent tariffs by the Trump administration...

New location feature on X sheds light on accounts — but also has errors

New location feature on X sheds light on accounts — but also has errors

Tool could help spot fraudsters, interference but should be examined critically: expert. Canadian researchers who track online misinformation and foreign interference are welcoming a new feature that reveals the location of an X account but warn that it still has glitches and its results should be taken with a grain of salt.

Conservative MPs question basis of 30% marine protected areas target

Conservative MPs question basis of 30% marine protected areas target

Conservative members on the House committee on fisheries and oceans are raising concerns about the impact of and science behind marine protected areas that the federal government is establishing to meet its 2030 conservation goals. They say fishermen in their coastal ridings have not been consulted and are worried the plan will shut down fishing grounds and take away their livelihoods.

Alberta minister reportedly putting together first AI-generated legislation in Canada

Alberta minister reportedly putting together first AI-generated legislation in Canada

The Alberta government is about to take the next logical step in artificial intelligence -- using it to draft a proposed law. Service Alberta Minister Dale Nally says the plan is to use AI to develop and introduce the Alberta Whisky Act when the house sits next spring. "AI is a tool that is being leveraged across many sectors in...

Melanie Joly eyes Paris ambassador role as Carney plans major cabinet overhaul

Melanie Joly eyes Paris ambassador role as Carney plans major cabinet overhaul

Add Melanie Joly’s name to the list of Trudeau-era cabinet ministers looking to head for the exits under Mark Carney Speculation out of Ottawa is that Melanie Joly could leave cabinet in a matter of weeks if the right appointment comes along.

Carney says B.C. 'has to agree' on pipeline plan from Alberta

Carney says B.C. 'has to agree' on pipeline plan from Alberta

Prime Minister Mark Carney says British Columbia "has to agree" on a potential pipeline from Alberta to the Pacific coast. Carney is expected to unveil a memorandum of understanding on a new energy pact with Alberta in Calgary on Thursday that likely will include language about a new pipeline. In question period today, Carney said that MOU would lay out...

‘Elbows up’ means 'lots of things,' energy minister says after pressed on U.S.-based nuclear contract

‘Elbows up’ means 'lots of things,' energy minister says after pressed on U.S.-based nuclear contract

Critics raised national security concerns about giving access to Canada’s homegrown nuclear technology to companies involved with the U.S. Department of Defence

MPs ‘speechless’ after Stellantis fails to show up to hearing, citing technical issues

MPs ‘speechless’ after Stellantis fails to show up to hearing, citing technical issues

Members of Parliament from multiple parties slammed Stellantis on Tuesday for failing to show up to a committee hearing about the federal government’s multimillion-dollar funding deals with the global automaker. “I am incredibly annoyed that Stellantis has not been able to join us,” said Vince Gasparro, the Liberal MP for Eglinton—Lawrence. “This is incredibly frustrating and […] at this point...

Carney says his comment about speaking with Trump was a 'poor choice of words'

Carney says his comment about speaking with Trump was a 'poor choice of words'

Prime Minister Mark Carney says his recent reply to a question about the state of trade talks with the U.S. -- "Who cares?" -- amounted to "a poor choice of words." Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre hammered the prime minister over his comment during question period in the House of Commons today. Poilievre says that Conservatives care about job losses in...

Newfoundland is 'back in the oil business,' new premier vows ahead of Carney meeting

Newfoundland is 'back in the oil business,' new premier vows ahead of Carney meeting

Newfoundland and Labrador Premier Tony Wakeham says he is heading to Ottawa later today with demands for Prime Minister Mark Carney. Wakeham told a St. John's business conference he wants Carney to designate Bay du Nord -- a proposed offshore oil development by Equinor -- as a major project of national interest.

Five more Alberta UCP legislature members facing recall, bringing total to 14

Five more Alberta UCP legislature members facing recall, bringing total to 14

Elections Alberta says it has approved recall petitions against five more members of Premier Danielle Smith's United Conservative Party caucus, bringing the total to 14. The new number means that almost a third of the 47 United Conservative members in the legislature are under recall.

Women's groups criticize Liberals over delay of key firearms measure

Women's groups criticize Liberals over delay of key firearms measure

More than a dozen women's advocacy groups are denouncing what they call federal government inaction on a gun control measure designed to save lives. In a statement issued today, the organizations chastise the Liberals for failing to bring into force a key provision in firearms legislation passed almost two years ago. The measure would make anyone subject to a special...

MPs call on feds to bring back bill criminalizing coercive behaviour in relationships

MPs call on feds to bring back bill criminalizing coercive behaviour in relationships

OTTAWA -- MPs on the House of Commons status of women committee called on the federal government Tuesday to criminalize coercive behaviour in intimate relationships.

Ontario NDP asks integrity commissioner to investigate labour minister

Ontario NDP asks integrity commissioner to investigate labour minister

The leader of Ontario's NDP is asking the province's integrity commissioner to investigate the labour minister, alleging he has breached ethics rules in handing out skills training funding. Labour Minister David Piccini has come under fire for his handling of the Skills Development Fund, after an auditor general report found his office has been selecting funding recipients over the advice...

Who is Steve Outhouse, Pierre Poilievre’s new campaign manager?

Who is Steve Outhouse, Pierre Poilievre’s new campaign manager?

Pierre Poilievre has tapped a veteran Conservative campaigner to help steer the party through the next federal election. Steve Outhouse, an affable Nova Scotian with deep roots in the federal Conservatives as well as provincial Tory parties, will serve as Poilievre’s campaign manager in the next federal campaign. It will be Outhouse’s first time running the national campaign.

The ongoing effort to legislate judicial oversight of solitary confinement

The ongoing effort to legislate judicial oversight of solitary confinement

Those who’ve been locked up in isolation for weeks, months or even years recall doing almost anything to pass the time. Often, the only breaks are meals slid through a metal slot, a shower, perhaps a brief walk, and a chance to speak with a parole officer, elder, or nurse. Segregation has well-documented impacts such as panic attacks, assaults, crushing...

Meta pitching app store age verification law to Liberal government

Meta pitching app store age verification law to Liberal government

Meta has been lobbying the federal government for new rules to implement age verification at the app store level -- which would put the burden on companies like Apple and Google, not individual platforms like Meta's Facebook and Instagram. The company has been pitching the idea in meetings with both the federal and provincial governments, said Meta Canada director of...

Farmers will lobby Ottawa for $50K guaranteed annual income pilot program

Farmers will lobby Ottawa for $50K guaranteed annual income pilot program

A farmers advocacy group says it plans to lobby the federal government for a guaranteed annual income of $50,000. The idea by the National Farmers Union came from its annual convention, held last week in New Brunswick.

Accessibility office in limbo as it calls out federal government's failures

Accessibility office in limbo as it calls out federal government's failures

The federal Office of Public Service Accessibility is in limbo months after it produced a document accusing the government of falling behind on supports for public servants with disabilities. The document, obtained by The Canadian Press through information access law, says the government is lagging on plans to accommodate employees with disabilities. Prepared by the Office of Public Service Accessibility...



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New prosecutor won't pursue charges against Trump and others in Georgia election interference case

New prosecutor won't pursue charges against Trump and others in Georgia election interference case

ATLANTA (AP) -- The prosecutor who recently took over the Georgia election interference case against President Donald Trump and others said in a court filing Wednesday that he has decided not to pursue the case further.

Health care plan circulated by the White House runs into familiar GOP divisions

Health care plan circulated by the White House runs into familiar GOP divisions

WASHINGTON (AP) -- A health care proposal circulated by the White House in recent days is running into the reality of Republican divisions on the issue -- a familiar struggle for a party that has been trying to scrap or overhaul the Affordable Care Act for the past 15 years.

Dismissal of Comey, James cases won't be the final word. Here's what the path ahead may look like

Dismissal of Comey, James cases won't be the final word. Here's what the path ahead may look like

WASHINGTON (AP) -- A federal judge's dismissal of criminal cases against former FBI Director James Comey and New York Attorney Letitia James, two political foes of President Donald Trump, won't be the final word on the matter.

Marjorie Taylor Greene's resignation shocked some in Georgia who say she could've won without Trump

Marjorie Taylor Greene's resignation shocked some in Georgia who say she could've won without Trump

ATLANTA (AP) -- Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene built a reputation in Congress as a fighter, first as a defender of President Donald Trump and more recently, as someone who clashed with him.

International

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Two National Guardsmen shot in Washington, DC, according to DHS chief

Two National Guardsmen shot in Washington, DC, according to DHS chief

Two National Guardsmen were shot in Washington, DC, on Wednesday, according to Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem. The shooting occurred in downtown Washington, DC, on Wednesday, according to a source familiar with the early reports and a law enforcement official.

Trump says he's barring South Africa from participating in next year's G20 summit in Miami

Trump says he's barring South Africa from participating in next year's G20 summit in Miami

WEST PALM BEACH, Fla. (AP) -- President Donald Trump said Wednesday that he is barring South Africa from participating in the Group of 20 summit next year in Miami and will "stop all payments and subsidies" to the country over its treatment of a U.S. government representative at this year's global meeting.

'Rush Hour 4' will be distributed by Paramount after Trump's reported request

'Rush Hour 4' will be distributed by Paramount after Trump's reported request

NEW YORK (AP) -- After President Donald Trump's reported intervention, Paramount Pictures is set to distribute Brett Ratner's "Rush Hour 4," a project that Hollywood had eschewed after earlier sexual misconduct allegations against the director.

Pushing an end to the Russia-Ukraine war, Trump looks to his Gaza ceasefire playbook

Pushing an end to the Russia-Ukraine war, Trump looks to his Gaza ceasefire playbook

LONDON (AP) -- President Donald Trump's efforts to broker an end to the Russia-Ukraine war closely mirrors the tactics he used to end two years of fighting between Israel and Hamas: bold terms that favor one side, deadlines for the combatants and vague outlines for what comes next. The details -- enforcing the terms, guaranteeing security, who pays for rebuilding...

US aide coached Putin's aide on pitching Trump, according to a Bloomberg report

US aide coached Putin's aide on pitching Trump, according to a Bloomberg report

President Donald Trump's chief interlocutor with the Russian government last month advised a senior aide to Vladimir Putin on how the Russian leader should go about pitching the U.S. president on a peace plan aimed at bringing an end to Russia's war in Ukraine, according to a transcript of the call published by Bloomberg News on Tuesday.

Think Tank

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Cannabis at the Crossroads: Rethinking Canada’s Cannabis Policy for the Next Decade

Cannabis at the Crossroads: Rethinking Canada’s Cannabis Policy for the Next Decade

When Canada legalized cannabis in 2018, it launched a national experiment in health, safety, and economic policy. Seven years later, the results are clear enough to measure and complex enough to debate. Cannabis has moved from the margins of public life and to the mainstream of the Canadian economy. Yet much of the federal framework that governs it remains frozen...

COP30: Canada continues to be a global laggard on climate action

COP30: Canada continues to be a global laggard on climate action

The COP30 Global Climate Summit in Belém, Brazil marked the 10th anniversary of the landmark Paris Accord, where countries agreed to limit global warming to 1.5 C above pre-industrial levels by 2050. The world is now anticipated to heat up by 2.6 C above preindustrial levels by the end of the century.

Is the CPTPP Ready to Meet the Moment?

Is the CPTPP Ready to Meet the Moment?

Expectations were high as trade ministers of the Comprehensive and Progressive Agreement for Trans-Pacific (CPTPP) gathered in Melbourne, Australia, in late November 2025, during what has been an unprecedented year for global trade. U.S. President Trump’s tariff spree has shaken the foundations of the multilateral trade order. China’s newly tightened export controls on critical minerals have threatened to grind global...


Substacks

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A collection of SubStack publishing within Canadian public affairs.

Why Canada's defence budget is upside-down

Why Canada's defence budget is upside-down

I went back to Ottawa this week. It’s been a while since I’ve been in the nation’s capital to talk about peace issues, so when the Senate of Canada contacted me, I had to go. Prime Minister Carney’s Budget 2025 is making its way through Parliament, and the Senate’s Committee on National Security, Defence and Veterans Affairs asked me and...

Air quotes and the politics of tone Why the Pierre Poilievre brand is such a hard sell.

Air quotes and the politics of tone Why the Pierre Poilievre brand is such a hard sell.

Pierre Poilievre’s recent video attacking Mark Carney could have been a strong argument. If not for the air quotes. When he says Carney promised he could “handle Trump” and “negotiate a win,” his fingers twitch into the familiar inverted-comma gesture. It’s a tiny move, but it says everything. Air quotes don’t persuade; they perform. They turn conviction into commentary and...

What might be Trump’s next challenge of Canada’s independence and sovereignty?

What might be Trump’s next challenge of Canada’s independence and sovereignty?

As Prime Minister Mark Carney said, “Donald Trump wants to break us so America can own us.” But what if Trump decides to use military power along with economic tariffs? An Arctic expert writing in The Globe and Mail says we shouldn’t think of tanks or helicopters streaming over the border. Instead, an American show-of-force could begin with a single...

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Hatchet buried? The politics of an Alberta energy deal

Hatchet buried? The politics of an Alberta energy deal

On Thursday Prime Minister Mark Carney and Alberta’s Danielle Smith are set to announce the outlines of a plan that could set Alberta and B.C. on a collision course. It’s a potential energy deal that would give Alberta special exemptions from federal environmental laws and offer political support for a new oil pipeline to the B.C. coast, among other things...

Why do immigrants want Ottawa to admit fewer newcomers?

Why do immigrants want Ottawa to admit fewer newcomers?

A recent Leger poll commissioned by OMNI News found that 67% of newcomers believe Canada should admit fewer than 300,000 new immigrants per year, and 4 in 10 say that number should be less than 100,000.

The Numbers: Will Carney have to choose between Alberta and BC?

The Numbers: Will Carney have to choose between Alberta and BC?

Prime Minister Mark Carney is reportedly set to announce a new agreement with Alberta Premier Danielle Smith that could pave the way for a new pipeline to the Pacific coast. The only problem? British Columbia might not be on board. Beyond the implications for the economy and the environment, could choosing between Alberta and B.C. have electoral repercussions for the...

Every NDP Leadership Candidate on WTF They Would Do

Every NDP Leadership Candidate on WTF They Would Do

The federal NDP leadership race is officially on. Five candidates want the job, and each of them thinks they know how to rescue a party that’s been drifting into irrelevance. In this special episode, Noor sits down with all five contenders (Tony McQuail, Rob Ashton, Avi Lewis, Heather McPherson, and Tanille Johnston) for an unfiltered, no-notes conversation about who they...